These palaces and castles were originally the lavish homes of rulers or the dreamlike creations of aristocrats or business titans who fashioned themselves after royalty. They were considered to be the height of luxury when they were built.

Now, they are dilapidated and crumbling.

Some of these palaces have now been restored and even serve as wedding venues. Others, however, have remained untouched for years — reduced to a creepy spot to snap an Instagram photo.

Keep reading for a closer look at 14 abandoned palaces around the world.

14 haunting photos of abandoned palaces and castles around the world slides

14 haunting photos of abandoned palaces and castles around the world slides

Bodiam Castle — Sussex, England

Bodiam Castle was built in 1385 by a knight of Edward III who planned to use it as a fortified family manor. After that family line died out, the castle changed hands several times until it eventually was left abandoned in the 17th century. Restoration work didn’t take off until 1925.

Leh Palace — Ladakh, India

Leh Palace was constructed out of mud, wood, sand, and stone in 1553. At nine stories high, Leh Palace once housed members of the royal family on the upper floors and stables and storerooms on the lower floors. The palace was invaded in the 19th century and has been abandoned since.

It is now a tourist attraction managed by the Archaeological Survey of India.

Jal Mahal — Jaipur, India

Jal Mahal is a „floating“ palace in the middle of a man-made lake in Jaipur, India. In reality, four levels of the building are submerged underwater. It was originally built in the 16th century as a hunting lodge for the local royals. Droughts, dams, and the expansion of the lake all contributed to the palace’s eventual sinking a century after it was built.

Today, there are rumored plans to convert the sunken palatial ruins into a restaurant.

The Palace of Sans Souci — Milot, Haiti

The Palace of Sans Souci is located in the mountains of northern Haiti and was completed in 1813. It was the home of King Henri Christophe until his death in 1820. It was known for being the „Versailles of the Caribbean.“ The palace was then irreparably damaged in an 1842 earthquake.

After standing empty for a century, it was designated a World Heritage Site in 1982.

Pidhirtsi Palace — Lviv, Ukraine

Pidhirtsi Palace was designed by Italian architect Andrea dell’Aqua in the 17th century as a home for Polish military commanders. The palace was then converted to a hospital for tuberculosis patients during World War II. It was shortly thereafter abandoned.

Wyndclyffe Castle — New York, United States

Built in 1853, Wyndclyffe Castle was once a 24-room country house for a Manhattan socialite named Elizabeth Schermerhorn Jones. The mansion was once so opulent that it was said to have inspired the phrase „Keeping up with the Joneses.“

It was abandoned in the 1950s. The dilapidated estate sold in a 2016 auction for $120,000.

Bannerman Castle — New York, United States

Sixty miles north of New York City, there is a 6.5 acre plot of land with a decrepit castle. It was built in 1901 by Francis Bannerman, a Scottish arms dealer who needed a place to store his merchandise, including guns and ammunition.

Bannerman died in 1918, and an explosion of the items housed inside destroyed the castle in 1920. It’s been completely abandoned since the 1950s and is now open for tours.

Villa de Vecchi —Cortenova, Italy

Villa de Vecchi is a mansion east of Lake Como that is rumored to be haunted. The house was built in the 1850s by the head of the Italian National Guard, Felix de Vecchi. As legend has it, he returned home on day to find his wife brutally murdered and his daughter missing. A lengthy search for his daughter turned up nothing and he died by suicide later that year. The villa was passed on to de Vecchi’s brother, who lived there until World War II.

No prospective buyer was interested in the potentially haunted house. It was left permanently uninhabited by the 1960s.

Swannanoa Palace — Virginia, United States

An American railroad executive, James H. Dooley, had this marble villa constructed in 1912 as a replica of the Villa de Medici in Rome. It took 300 artisans to complete and included a 4,000-piece Tiffany stained glass window.

After the Dooleys died in the 1920s, the villa was converted into a country club. It was officially abandoned in the 1980s and then turned into a historical site.

Sammezzano Castle — Leccio, Italy

There is a 365-room abandoned palace atop a hill just south of Florence, Italy, that was built in 1605 by Spanish nobility. It has seen several iterations: At one point, it was owned by the famed Medici family, and later, after World War II, it was even used as a luxury hotel.

Sammezzano Castle has been closed and effectively abandoned since the 1990s.

Gbadolite — Nsele, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Gbadolite, once a small village, was turned into the „Versailles of the Jungle“ by former journalist Mobutu Sese Seko, who seized power in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 1965, renamed the country Zaire, and established himself as the president. The estate included a night club, a hotel, and an international airport in addition to Mobutu’s private residence. After a military overthrow, he abandoned the palace and fled to Morocco in 1997. He died three months later of prostate cancer.